A Manual Therapist's Guide to Movement: Teaching Motor Skills to the Orthopaedic Patient

Here's the only available book that examines the use of non-traditional movement systems (especially the Feldenkrais Method®) in the physical therapy setting to
treat orthopaedic conditions/injuries. These systems represent a style of internalexercisedesigned to increase the
patient's self awareness and attention to proprioceptive detail, emphasizing integrated or whole bodypatternsof movement and the use of
movement constraints that encourage specific movements and/or muscle contractions. It describes the principles of ideal movement and posture, as well as common movement errors people make that
lead to musculoskeletal dysfunction. It also discusses the distal or associative motor effects of injury and how to reintegrate the injured part of the body with the compensating whole. Patient
lessons featureinstructionsfor movements presented in
clear, easy-to-follow, well-illustrated sequences.

- Provides usable, practical information about movement andmotor control.
- Written in easy to understand language, with well-illustrated concepts.
- Advocates the use of non-traditional movement systems (especially Feldenkrais principles, as well as Tai Chi) in a physical therapy setting.
- Presents a view of lumbo-pelvic function that emphasizes control and movement of the pelvis and low back by the legs, rather than the belly/back muscles as prime movers.
- Introduces the concept of the pelvic force couple, a fundamental building block of human movement and a prime factor in many common musculoskeletalcomplaints.
- Promotes a view of knee and foot function that emphasizes control of the knee and foot from the larger muscles of the hip and thigh.
- Suggestsexercisingin reciprocating patterns of
movement rather than just in the correct direction a technique for teaching and facilitating awareness.